WannaCry Ransom Money Is on the Move

The hackers behind May’s WannaCry cyberattack have moved the ransom money they accumulated from three bitcoin accounts to other, larger accounts, online tracking records show.

The WannaCry attack paralyzed business and government computer systems across the world by exploiting security flaws first unearthed by the National Security Agency. Among the groups hardest hit were the Spanish telecom giant Telefonica and the United Kingdom’s health ministry. Hospitals in Britain were forced to turn away patients for multiple days while officials scrambled to regain control of their computer systems.

Though the hackers, which are believed to have ties to North Korea, succeeded in upending cybersecurity systems across the world, their efforts to turn it into a money-making scheme largely failed due to their own ineptitude.

For starters, though bitcoin transactions are public, they are also anonymous. The three accounts the hackers set up to receive ransom payments from victims were unable to track who had made the payments, meaning the decryption codes the hackers promised were unreliable, making it less likely victims would be willing to pay the ransom in the first place. Other basic coding errors made some of the system take-overs easily remedied.

In another twist, the hackers set up a free email account to communicate with victims that was almost immediately identified by the service provider and shut down.

In all, the hackers received about $140,000 in ransom money in the form of bitcoin payments. Even that payment was inflated due to the rising value of bitcoin in the months since the WannaCry attack. At the time, they received less than $100,000 in ransom payments.

International trackers set up a Twitter account to monitor and report any movement in the three accounts the hackers used. On Thursday, that account noted the accounts were drained and the bitcoins were transferred into larger joint accounts known as…